Abstract
Weight reduction is the main driving force in automotive and aircraft structural design.
As a result, magnesium alloys, with their high potential for lightweight construction, have attracted
a considerable amount of industrial attention. The determining criterion for the structural
applications of magnesium alloys is the availability of efficient joining technologies for the
construction of lightweight structures and the availability of reliable data for the assessment of their
damage tolerance behaviour. Laser beam welding (LBW), as a high-speed and easily controllable
process, allows the welding of complex geometric forms that are optimised in terms of mechanical
stiffness, strength, production velocity and visual quality. The work accomplished in this study
addresses the challenges of the LBW process for typical joint configurations using the magnesium
alloy AZ31HP: butt joints, T joints and overlap joints. LBW processes were developed for use with
a 3.3-kW Nd:YAG laser to optimise the mechanical performance of such joints with respect to
tensile strength, fatigue, fatigue crack propagation and mechanical fracture behaviour. The
relationships between the LBW process and the microstructural and mechanical properties of welds
were established. Compared to state-of-the-art aerospace alloys, AZ31HP demonstrates that
magnesium alloys have potential for use in structural applications, with AZ31HP being comparable
to AA2024T351 and AA6061T6. Welded AZ31HP exhibits better crack resistance than the base
material, so fully welded integral structures made from magnesium alloys can be used in
lightweight construction.